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The Digital Skeptic: Patience Is the New Black in Domestic Manufacturing

Written by: Jonathan Blum01/29/13 - 8:00 AM EST

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NEW YORK ( TheStreet) -- Joel Domino has the secret to making money while making things that screen and device giants such as Samsung and Apple (AAPL) don't.

"What I learned is, the regulations have an effect. The expertise is part of it. The right vendors are important," Domino told me a few weeks back, as we talked over his company's radical new liquid crystal display. "But at the end of the day, you have to have patient investors."

"We are in the heart of a new ecosystem for screens in Ohio. The story of what it took to get that all in place has not been told," he said.

The technology Domino is president of tiny Kent Displays , the Kent, Ohio-based interactive LCD maker. No, friends, that's no misprint. Domino really does make real money building world-beating displays, not in Chongqing, but 35 miles southeast of Cleveland. In mid-2012, Kent announced a second production line for its interactive LCDs. And a Kent spokesman, Kevin Oswald, confirmed to me that the 100-person firm makes about a million screens a year and that growth in "the past few years has averaged about 50%."

Domino sketched out for me what makes Kent unique on the back of a piece of scrap graph paper. The company pioneered a process that avoids the billion-dollar infrastructure needed to cut stiff screens from large plates of glass, as Samsung might. Kent engineered a simpler method in which two plastic substrates are fed continuously off separate rolls and pressed together. Liquid crystal is then spread inside this substrate/liquid crystal sandwich, sealed and cut into screen slugs by a laser.

"We have one person at the front of the line, one person at the back of the line," Domino said. "And that is pretty much it."

Analysts confirm that Kent defines a new generation of radically lower-cost screen technologies that can display and store hand-drawn information, making tiny Kent a rare bit of good news in the huge -- but surprisingly profit challenged -- global screen and device business.

"Emerging display companies like Kent are a drop of rain compared to Samsung," Sweta Dash told me over the phone. Dash has spent 25 years studying the screen market as the senior director of display research and strategy at IHS iSuppli , based in El Segundo, Calif. Dash says that screen giants such as Samsung may sell $85 billion to $125 billion worth of screens a year, but "those plants have been losing money for the last six to eight quarters ... which makes new technologies like Kent's attractive."

A key product has been the cool Boogie Board paperless writing tablet. "We were careful not to compete with Samsung or Apple to start," Domino said. "But eventually this process will be in a much wider variety of displays."